Young Folks' Library, Volume XI (of 20) eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 349 pages of information about Young Folks' Library, Volume XI (of 20).

Young Folks' Library, Volume XI (of 20) eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 349 pages of information about Young Folks' Library, Volume XI (of 20).

[Illustration:  VIEW IN A CANON.]

So far is clear.  But now we come to a difficulty.

The Stratified Rocks, of which a very large part of the continents is made, appear to have been built up slowly, layer upon layer, out of the gravel, sand, and mud, washed away from the land and dropped on the shore of the ocean.

[Illustration:  SEA CLIFFS SHOWING A SERIES OF STRATIFIED ROCKS.]

You may see these layers for yourself as you walk out into the country.  Look at the first piece of bluff rock you come near, and observe the clear pencil-like markings of layer above layer—­not often indeed lying flat, one over another, and this must be explained later, but however irregularly slanting, still plainly visible.  You can examine these lines of stratification on the nearest cliff, the nearest quarry, the nearest bare headland, in your neighborhood.

But how can this be?  If all these stratified rocks are built on the floor of the ocean out of material taken from the land, how can we by any possibility find such rocks upon the land?  In the beds of rivers we might indeed expect to see them, but surely nowhere else save under ocean waters.

Yet find them we do.  Through England, through the two great world-continents, they abound on every side.  Thousands of miles in unbroken succession are composed of such rocks.

Stand with me near the seashore, and let us look around.  Those white chalk cliffs—­they, at least, are not formed of sand or earth.  True, and the lines of stratification are in them very indistinct, if seen at all; yet they too are built up of sediment of a different kind, dropping upon ocean’s floor.  See, however, in the rough sides of yonder bluff the markings spoken of, fine lines running alongside of one another, sometimes flat, sometimes bent or slanting, but always giving the impression of layer piled upon layer.  Yet how can one for a moment suppose that the ocean-waters ever rose so high?

Stay a moment.  Look again at yonder white chalk cliff, and observe a little way below the top a singular band of shingles, squeezed into the cliff, as it were, with chalk below and earth above.

That is believed to be an old sea-beach.  Once upon a time the waters of the sea are supposed to have washed those shingles, as now they wash the shore near which we stand, and all the white cliff must have lain then beneath the ocean.

Geologists were for a long while sorely puzzled to account for these old sea-beaches, found high up in the cliffs around our land in many different places.

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Young Folks' Library, Volume XI (of 20) from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.